Tag: The Met

The impressionist era artists produced a dizzying amount of work the explored and celebrated the outdoors, and in what could be termed The Met garden show, you can see an impressive exploration of this work. The artists displayed include many of the painters that are the biggest names from the late eighteenth century to the early twentieth: Monet, Rousseau, Van Gogh, Seurat, and Renoir.

The exhibit is organized around four main sections: Public Parks, Flowers, Private Gardens, and Portraits in Gardens. Each of these sections includes great works, but here are my favorites from each.

Public Parks

The Edge of the Woods at Monts-Girard, Fontainebleau Forest – Théodore Rousseau

Rousseau's pre-impressionist work shows woods not far from Paris and includes a mixture of young and old trees. As this was the type of painting that many of the other artists on display were likely exposed to as at a young age, it helps set the stage for what will be seen in the rest of the show.

Flowers

Bouquet of Sunflowers – Claude Monet

Sunflowers – Vincent Van Gogh

I've seen both of these paintings before, but seeing them next to each other allows for the opportunity to compare them in a completely different way. Van Gogh's frail emotion vs. Monet's cheery impression. Van Gogh painted many more sunflowers than this one, but it's frail expression of emotion contrasts with Monet's exploration of color. This room contains still lifes using a number of different mediums and some early photograph prints.

Private Gardens

Figures under a Tree – Auguste Renoir

One of the things that impressed me the most about this exhibit was the quantity of watercolor and pastel paintings. As easier to use when outside of a studio, it makes sense to see them so highly represented. This Renoir seems like something he may have produced as a sketch rather than a dramatic large painting. This section contains many Monet paintings from the more realist Garden at Sainte-Adresse to the larger than life The Path through the Irises.

Portraits

The Monet Family in Their Garden at Argenteuil – Édouard Manet

Camille Monet's eyes grabbed me the moment I saw this painting. Manet sets a scene that almost looks like the bokeh portrait photographers aim for. This section also includes work by Mary Cassatt, one of the few women and few Americans in this exhibition

The Met has an incredible collection of Monet, and it is on display throughout this show, but it is the opportunity to see multiple artists working on the same or similar subjects
is the true highlight of this show.

Public Parks, Private Gardens: Paris to Provence is at The Met until July 29th in
Gallaries 964-965 which is on the ground floor below The Robert Lehman Collection. I can't wait for it to warm up a bit so that I can explore it again and then sit in Central Park with these masterpieces fresh in my mind. If you aren't able to make it to New York to see this exhibit, you can view many of the pieces on The Met's site for this exhibit.

Claude Monet is one of the foremost painters of the impressionist movement. His efforts to show the motion and color of light are in full force at museums in New York City. If you want to view works by Monet, you aren't limited to just one of the art museums in NYC. In fact, Monet's work is currently being displayed in four different New York Museums.

30 works of Monet are on display at the met. These include works from when the artist was in his mid-twenties and using the inspiration of Japanese art to embrace the 2d nature of paintings. Garden at Sainte-Adresse is an example of this period of Monet's career.

As Monet grew older, his landscapes began to show more motion. Vétheuil in Summer was done in 1880. The brushstrokes visible in the Seine help portray the constant changing reflection of light on a body of water.

As Monet grew older, he continued his exploration of light by painting the same locations during multiple parts of the day. While making Rouen Cathedral: The Portal (Sunlight), he moved from canvas to canvas as the day progressed. More than 30 paintings make up the Rouen Cathedral series.

While finishing the Rouen Cathedral series, Monet began putting in a water garden on his property that would serve as the inspiration for some of his
best known works. Already in his mid-fifties, the Water Lillies demonstrate how Cataracts affected Monet's Vision with earlier works showing much greater detail, while the later works demonstrate the blurring and color changes he saw as his eyes changed.

Overall, the 30 works of Monet currently on view at the Met demonstrate the artist's evolution.

Museum of Modern Art

MoMA has a Monet specific gallery featuring 3 works from the Artists later career including a massive 3-panel Water Lilly that is one of the more breathtaking pieces of art in NYC.

Between the breadth of work at The
Met, and the monumental Water Lilies at MoMA, you have multiple options for exploring Monet in NYC. There are few better cities for exploring this Impressionist master.